mishandled baggage service recovery: winning the
TRANSCRIPT
Mishandled Baggage Service Recovery: Winning the Satisfaction Game
Thesis
Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for Graduation with Distinction in the Fisher College of Business of The Ohio State University
By
Zachary David Lenox
Undergraduate Program in Operations
The Ohio State University
2012
Thesis Committee:
Aravind Chandrasekaran, Co-Advisor
Andrea Prud’homme, Co-Advisor
Ken Boyer
Copyright by
Zachary David Lenox
2012
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Abstract
Service operations are pervasive and significant in today’s economy, with customers demanding both high levels of customization and consistency from service providers. A major challenge in service operations is service recovery: converting a dissatisfied customer into a satisfied one. In the case of airlines, some of the most important service recovery efforts occur after baggage has been delayed, lost or damaged. Baggage recovery typically occurs at the end of a customer’s airline experience, making it one of the most memorable interactions that can impact return tendencies. Despite the importance of this interaction, our study American Airlines, Continental, Delta, Southwest, Northwest, United, and US Airways over nine years and 18.5 million baggage transactions shows that Southwest Airlines dominates its competitors as a clear leader in positive service recovery efforts.
The purpose of this research is to investigate the procedures, policies, and cultural differences between Southwest Airlines and the remaining competitors. Using service-profit chain theory, we show the importance of procedures, policies, and employee empowerment on service recovery efforts. In order to do this, we conduct fourteen interviews with associates and managers from multiple airlines. Our analyses suggest that Southwest Airlines does a better job of communicating service recovery policies to customers. These results provide evidence of real differences between the service recovery processes of Southwest Airlines and the competition. Furthermore, this corroborates previous work finding that Southwest consistently outperforms competitors in many service dimensions. As airlines consolidate and expand, and as the customer base grows, providing high quality service to passengers will become increasingly difficult. This research provides a look at one critical area where airlines can improve and make commerce easier.
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Dedication
Dedicated to Astasia, Darren, Eliot, Peter, Ramin, Rob, and my parents. May the
years continue to bring us back together.
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Acknowledgments
I owe deep gratitude to my faculty advisors, Aravind Chandrasekaran and Andrea
Prud’homme. Without your guidance and support this would not have been
possible. Thank you for believing in me. I’d also like to thank John David ‘Blacki’
Blackburn for his advice and stories over the past year and Harrison Steinbuch
for his unfailing friendship and art consulting.
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Table of Contents
(i) Abstract ii
(ii) Dedication iii
(iii) Acknowledgments iv
(iv) Table of Contents v
1. Introduction 1
2. Literature Review 8
3. Research Methodology 14
4. Results 16
5. Conclusion 28
6. References 31
1
1. Introduction
In today’s economy, daily interaction with a service industry competitor is
nearly guaranteed. As companies that sell primarily intangible goods, services
are estimated to make up 77% of added value in the American economy
according to the World Bank (WDI & GDF, 2010). Due to the nature of services,
some companies are constrained by characteristics such as inseparability of
manufacture and delivery, immediate perishability, and intangibility, which
distinguish services from manufacturing. Service operations research, spawned
in the late-1970’s, became keystone literature for students and practitioners
interested in learning secrets to financial success through service delivery. Over
the years, service operations research evolved as a conglomeration of
operations, marketing, and human resources, reflecting the importance of tight
coordination among disciplines to achieve consistent customer satisfaction
(Johnston, 1999).
A significant problem faced by practitioners is to deliver consistently
satisfactory levels of service to customers. The issue stems from the customer’s
presence throughout service delivery, and requires constant adaptation on the
2
part of employees to micro customer demand and individual customer
preferences. Moreover, no customer receives exactly the same provided service
due, at a minimum, to the natural variation of human interaction and emotion
felt by front-line service employees. This necessitates close interaction between
operations, marketing, and human resources disciplines to ensure that
employees not only understand the service concept, but that they are able to
satisfactorily execute under varying conditions with a positive attitude.
Employees’ positive interaction with customers is tantamount to
achieving service success. Since services are intangible, there are no physical
goods changing hands with which a customer can judge the company;
employees serve as a main driver of satisfaction. Additionally, services perish
immediately upon consumption, such as seats on an airline flight that cannot be
sold after the flight leaves, often leaving employees only a single interaction with
which to create a positive image for the customer. Without clear standards and
employee empowerment to meet customer demands throughout a day, services
can be a customer’s worst nightmare. With them, it can be difficult for any
competing offering to break the repeat customer’s loyalty.
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One way to retain customer loyalty after service failure is to execute an
effective service recovery initiative. This effort involves recognizing the
customer’s problem, providing timely compensation or resolution, and assuring
them that the cause of failure will be rectified (Sasser, Hart, & Heskett, 1991).
Done properly, customer service recovery can return a customer’s satisfaction
with the service, provide confidence in the company, and lead to loyalty, thereby
avoiding negative word-of-mouth and a lost customer (Maxham, 2001).
Due to the critical influence of service recovery on brand image and
profitability, this study will delve deeper into the service recovery framework to
develop further understanding of its components. Many service industries rely
on service recovery, but if service recovery centers around customer critical
items, it heightens the importance of the interaction. Thus, this research will
focus on airlines’ bag service recovery, because some of the most significant
service interactions with an airline take place after a customer’s personal item
has been delayed, lost or damaged. Baggage recovery typically occurs at the end
of a customer’s airline experience, making it one of the most memorable
interactions that can impact return tendencies of customers.
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Airlines are a service sector many Americans are intimately familiar with.
Last year, U.S. airlines carried 638 million passengers domestically, providing
primary transport for most passengers travelling over 600 miles from origin to
destination (Wensveen, 2007). Despite large passenger numbers, airlines are
plagued by exaggerated business cycles, persistently low returns of 3% industry
wide which are well below their 8% cost of capital over the past decade (Pearce,
2010). One cause of these problems may be a lack of customer focus, a
necessity highlighted by numerous service operations researchers (Dodds, 1999;
Gronroos & Ravald, 1996; Hallowell, 1996; Heskett et al., 1994; Holt & Payne,
N/A; Singgih & Purnasakti, 2010; Parasuraman, Berry, & Zeithaml, 1991). In
addition to these generalized observations, Southwest Airlines provides an
exalted example of service excellence, begetting profitability. While recognized
as the airline service leader by organizations like the American Customer
Satisfaction Index, Consumer Reports, JD Power & Associates, and Fortune
Magazine, Southwest is also the only airline in this study to report a profit every
year between 2002 and 2010 (American Airlines 2002-2010, Continental Airlines
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2002-2010, Delta Airlines 2002-2010, Northwest 2002-2007, Southwest Airlines
2002-2010, United Airlines 2002-2010, US Airways 2002-2010).
One major factor in Southwest’s profitability may be an effective service
recovery program. To measure the frequency with which airlines must initiate
baggage service recovery efforts, we aggregated mishandled baggage data per
1,000 customers from the Bureau of Transportation Statistics monthly “Air
Consumer Travel Reports” for years 2002 - 2010. Figure 1 shows self-reported
mishandled baggage incidents for each airline studied. Data is collected per
Code of Federal Regulations Title 14, Federal Aviation Regulation 234.6, and
cover nearly every delayed bag incident, as well as all damaged, lost and
extended delays.
Figure 1
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Summary
American 4.26 4.42 4.73 5.88 6.36 7.26 5.68 4.30 3.82 5.19
United 3.73 3.92 3.95 4.27 5.72 5.81 5.23 4.09 3.42 4.46
Delta 3.58 3.83 5.36 7.00 6.92 7.59 6.00 4.90 3.53 5.41
Continental 3.12 3.10 3.55 4.10 4.71 5.29 3.91 2.71 2.65 3.68
US Air 2.95 3.54 5.34 9.55 7.85 8.41 4.76 3.04 2.58 5.33
Southwest 3.52 3.35 3.35 4.24 5.36 5.90 4.58 3.43 3.47 4.13
Northwest 4.46 3.40 4.24 4.88 4.62 5.02 3.49 2.59 4.09
Yearly Averages
Mishandled Bag Reports
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Conducting an ANOVA analysis, the variation between Southwest and its
competitors is not statistically significant at the .01 level with a p-value of .02
and with Continental, the farthest outlier removed from the data, the variation
between Southwest and its competitors becomes insignificant at the .1 level
with a p-value of .12. From 2002 to 2010, Southwest had the lowest mishandled
baggage rate only once and over the entire period had the 3rd lowest mishandled
baggage rate. This indicates that Southwest must deal with a similar percentage
of customers with bag complaints as its competitors.
Assuming a standard level of service recovery across the industry for
mishandled bags, we expect to see comparable customer satisfaction resulting
from the baggage service recovery process. Using mishandled bag complaints
per 100 million customers from the “Air Consumer Travel Report” as a measure
of customer satisfaction, however, reveals a dramatically different story.
Southwest is more successful at keeping customers from self-reporting
dissatisfaction with mishandled bags, by a factor of 10, better than any
competitor in any year covered in this study (Figure 2). In some months
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Southwest could even boast 100% satisfaction with their baggage service
recovery process.
Figure 2
Southwest’s success in mitigating mishandled bag complaints suggests that
their service recovery process exhibits tangible differences from the customer
point of view. The goal of this research is to identify the significant factors in
Southwest’s service recovery effort that mitigates their customer reported
service failures more successfully than its competitors. Inquiry into Southwest’s
service recovery methods as a benchmark against competitors should yield
insights into how companies can structure successful recovery efforts.
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Summary P-value
1.27E-27
American 2.6 1.82 2.27 3.08 3.74 5.07 3.9 3.33 3.95 3.31
United 2.95 1.79 1.91 3.04 3.16 4.8 4.14 3.02 3.82 3.18
Delta 1.88 1.46 2 3.4 2.93 5.56 4.89 4.81 4.11 3.45
Continental 2.03 1.78 1.7 2.28 2.15 2.95 2.16 1.94 2.64 2.18
US Air 1.57 2.1 2.05 8.01 3.59 4.83 2.63 2.2 2.07 3.23
Southwest 0.465 0.29 0.283 0.241 0.565 0.614 0.456 0.404 0.443 0.43
Northwest 2.2 1.59 1.41 2.24 1.68 3.17 1.95 2.97 2.15
Yearly Averages
Mishandled Bag Complaints
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2. Literature Review
Service operations research began with the identification of the
significant differences between manufacturing and services, which have
intangibility, inseparability of production and consumption, heterogeneity, and
perishability (Johnston, 1999; Parasuraman, Zeithaml, & Berry, 1985). Research
during this period was generally conceptual in nature, concerned with
developing frameworks for structured analysis and development of services
(Johnston, 1999). For example, researchers exploring customer contact time
(Chase, 1981), customization (Maister and Lovelock, 1982), and amount of value
added in the front and back office helped establish the widely recognized
categorizations of services as either mass, professional, or shop (Johnston,
1999). As the field matured, integration of operations and service concepts
including marketing and human resources became accepted practice as a field all
its own, to be tested empirically. Bitner (1990) used the critical incident method,
developed for traditional operations analysis, to test the impact of varying
service encounters on customer satisfaction. Parasuarman, Zeithaml, and Berry
(1988) took factors supposedly expected by customers categorized as: tangibles,
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reliability, responsiveness, assurance, and empathy, and measured their
importance across four service industries. They found all to be important with
reliability as the most significant and tangibility as the least. During this period,
there was also growing recognition that service operations could contribute to
improving traditional manufacturing operations research (Johnston, 1999). The
final stage of service operations research, the one informing this paper, is a
prescriptive one (Johnston, 1999). The discipline has enough empirically tested
framework foundations to understand relationships between operations drivers
such as quality, staff satisfaction, and internal quality on profits and customer
satisfaction. One such work, return on quality, by Rust et al. (1995, 1999) linked
investment in quality to measurable returns based on the assumptions that
quality must remain financially accountable, it is possible to spend too much on
quality, and not all quality expenditures are equally valid investments.
Service recovery, as a subcategory of service operations research,
harbors a framework all its own. To start, there are multiple foci of recovery
such as customer recovery, employee recovery and process recovery (Johnston
& Michel, 2008). Process recovery involves data collection and analysis of critical
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incidents followed by costing and improvement to rectify process deficiencies
(Johnston & Michel, 2008). Employee recovery is concerned with “supporting
employees in their difficult role”, whereas customer recovery, the focus of this
research, stresses the importance of returning a dissatisfied customer to
satisfaction (Johnston & Michel, 2008). Johnston & Michel (2008) tried to assess
the performance benefits of the three recovery modes, using established
frameworks such as the seven activities that appear to resolve complaints:
acknowledgement, empathy, apology, owning the problem, fixing the problem,
providing assurance, and providing compensation. Other service recovery work
focuses on issues specific to the task of returning unsatisfied customers to
satisfaction. Such research includes looking at how full, partial, and unresolved
resolutions effect customer return tendencies (Leong et al., 2002), measuring
the effect of these critical incidents (Edvardsson, 1992), and companies’ demand
coping mechanisms (Armistead & Clark, 1994).
Many service recovery researchers, such as Rio-Lanza et. al., view the
customer recovery process as intimately tied with theories of justice. This
analysis splits the process into three parts: distributive, procedural, and
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interactional justice. Distributive justice is the customer’s perception of what
they receive compared with what they deserve, procedural justice refers to
whether customers believe the decision-making criteria were fair, and
interactional justice captures the acceptability of interpersonal relations (Tax &
Brown, 1998; Gustafsson, 2009). These variations combine with the general
conclusion that companies should try to provide a recovery level “relative to
what the customer has invested in the relationship” (Gustafsson, 2009).
Another body of work, the service-profit chain (SPC), originated by
Heskett et al. (1997) modeled links between employee satisfaction and loyalty,
customer satisfaction and loyalty, and profitability. This concept has significant
implications for service recovery. SPC work showing that independent
employees endowed with capability and the freedom to work productively
provide better service to customers, hints at the possibility that independent
front-line employees provide quicker, more accurate, and cheaper service
recovery, as tested by Boshoff (1996). Further connection arises from the
proposition that loyal customers, measured appropriately under industry specific
circumstances, directly positively affects profitability. There is wide recognition
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that service recovery has an important impact on loyalty and also an implicit
understanding that an unrecovered customer carries hidden costs, such as
negative word-of-mouth and purchasing from competitors (Dewitt & Brady,
2003; Mattila, 2001; Maxham, 2001; Swanson & Kelley, 2001). Given the deep
connections between SPC and service recovery work, argued for by Tax and
Brown (1998), this research will highlight the SPC effects in furthering or
hindering service recovery efforts.
A final consideration in service recovery is the environment within which
the recovery takes place. Findings from Spangenberg et al.’s (1996) work on
olfactory cues to Wakefield and Blodgett’s (1996) look at college football
environments suggest that anything from the space, lighting, layout, smell,
parking, and color scheme can affect customer satisfaction. Thus, a critical
component of assessing the relative merits of service recovery efforts must look
at the physical space in which these interactions take place.
Service recovery, service-profit chain, and environment studies should
inform airline baggage service recovery to be financially responsible while
identifying with the customers’ problems and resolving them quickly and
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efficiently. While there is no body of work looking at service recovery applied
specifically to mishandled baggage to draw from, specific guidance can be found
from other research. For example, by assigning a specific office the task of
recovering mishandled bags, airlines reduce the amount of uncertainty
personnel and procedures must cover, thereby limiting costs. This could allow
airlines, despite dealing with idiosyncratic situations, to limit customization of
resolutions to a few common situations such as limited delays, over-night delays,
and extended delays by people trained to handle such issues. Additionally,
airlines should ensure that employees are trained to empathize with potentially
upset customers, and able to recover their emotions to a more positive state
before addressing the next person with an issue. From a customer perspective,
the recovery process is much better if the designated office is well lit, with
helpful and preferably positive signs, communicating that this is something that
the airline cares about, invests in, and sincerely wants to rectify. Finally,
managers should use critical mishandled baggage incidents to assess the
effectiveness of employees and processes to keep future failures from occurring
and continuing to recover customers successfully in the future.
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3. Research Methodology
Since service recovery has been established as critical to customer
retention, process improvement, employee retention, and profitability, when
the service concept fails, one might expect companies within a service sector to
compete to parity in recovery efforts, disallowing any firm to gain a competitive
advantage. However, we find a different story when examining airline data on
mishandled baggage rates and customer satisfaction with mishandled baggage.
Compared with competitors, Southwest Airlines does a decent yet not
extraordinary job of carrying bags without mishaps, but manages to return
customers, by an order of magnitude, to satisfaction more often than other
airlines.
Unbundling and analyzing the airline baggage recovery process was a
multi-step process. First, we undertook a review of airline website material to
understand the basic process. This information provided a general baseline to
gauge company conformance with their own stated policies, conformance of
service recovery standards across the industry, and ease of access to relevant
policies for customers. After this, further information was gathered utilizing in-
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depth, in-person interviews to gain first-hand knowledge of the recovery
process. Interviews were granted at three airlines: Southwest, United, and
American across all levels of the companies. Initial interviews were conducted
using a set of thirteen questions, tailored to understand training, management
support, and policies as they are put into practice. After at least two interviews
with each company, the questions were revised to a set of nineteen questions in
order to resolve unanswered questions or expand on others. Six interviews were
conducted with Southwest employees, consisting of station managers, two front-
line bag office employees, and one baggage manager at corporate headquarters.
Additionally, interviews with station managers and front line employees for
American and United were conducted for a total of fifteen interviews. After
interviews were conducted, reviews of baggage service offices at Port Columbus
and San Francisco International Airports were undertaken to assess the service
recovery environment provided by each airline. Finally, publicly available
documents for the airlines were assessed to glean information about employee
empowerment and compensation. With all the information compiled, an
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extensive review was undertaken to find what, if any, tangible differences might
exist from a customer perspective between Southwest and its competition.
4. Results
To initiate the inquiry into airline baggage service recovery, we reviewed the
airlines’ websites to gauge ease of use for customers as well as understand what
baseline policies could be expected within each company and across the
industry. The structure of all the companies’ websites are very similar, with
Southwest, United, American, and US Air’s websites only taking 2-clicks to get to
delayed, lost, or damaged policies while Delta’s website takes 3-clicks. The
format of United, American, and US Air’s websites is extremely similar, utilizing a
drop-down bar at the top of the page, while Southwest and Delta both use the
same alternative format of a link at the bottom of the page. Southwest and
American’s webpages stand out as well designed and visually pleasing, while
United’s webpage is basic, simply providing the links a customer might need.
Additionally, all the airlines provide information in simple language, allowing
almost any passenger to understand the terms and conditions of their liability
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and policies. Finally, all the companies prominently provide at least phone
contact information within their lost, delayed, and damaged bag pages.
Another important aspect of an airline’s website is to set customer
expectations about what will be covered and done by the airline to resolve an
issue. Thus, we use the websites to get a baseline of what procedures and
policies are used across the industry. For delayed bags, every airlines specifies
that passengers should report the missing bags within four hours at the airport
baggage service office, and should give the office five days to locate the bag. If
five days pass, then it is the customer’s responsibility to file a claim form with
the airline’s central baggage office. Currently, all the airlines except for
Southwest provide the ability to track your bag to see when it will arrive. Also,
Delta and US Air specifically mention reimbursable expenses for up to 5 days and
$50 per day, while American merely mentions that they are available and how to
claim them, and United and Southwest do not say anything on the subject. For
damaged bags, every company specifically denies responsibility for various every
day wear and tear, including damage to handles, wheels, zippers, and minor cuts
and scratches. Also, they eschew responsibility if a customers’ bag is deemed
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overstuffed, packed unsuitably, or for fragile items. All companies refer
customers to their central baggage office for damage complaints and place
responsibility on the customer to file a claim form. The companies seem to have
almost, if not exactly, the same policies outlined on their websites. Thus, no
company would prime customers to expect anything exceptional or out of the
ordinary from their baggage recovery processes.
The service recovery process begins in the baggage service office, with the
first face-to-face interaction a customer has after a bag does not appear on time
or arrives damaged. This initial stage of recovery is critical to eliminating
customer disconfirmation through tactical use of timely and adequate
repayment by an employee with proper rank to meet the situations’ demands
(Boshoff, 1996). For Southwest, American, and United, this process begins with
a front-line employee trained to work in the baggage office, at the ticket
counter, and at the boarding gate fielding the customers’ issue. Additionally, all
three airlines draw posts similarly, using an employee bid system in which all
those working a given shift rank their station preferences with the most senior
members getting first assignment. There is no systematic testing of knowledge
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or interpersonal skills by any airline, although all station managers indicated that
they can and do use discretion when placing employees to posts. Multiple
Southwest employees stated that one lady who has been with the company
since 1995 works the office Monday through Friday, suggesting that it is a
coveted position. However, a front-line United employee indicated that
although he had senior rank and did not want to work in the baggage office, he
was placed there over a junior employee because they did not have the requisite
knowledge. That example highlights one of the pitfalls of posting cross-trained
employees at such a critical front-line post. Although the employee on-duty had
the proper knowledge to service customers, he may not be fully engaged with
the job because he prefers another position or believes he been slighted by a co-
worker’s shortcomings.
On the other hand, by cross-training employees and rotating their
position assignments, management at all three airlines seem to be doing
equivalent jobs trying to break the monotony of being stuck at certain duties.
Many of the front-line staff noted in the interviews that they had recently
worked at other positions, and that each job demanded different skills. For
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instance, several staff members noted that the ticket counter requires them to
be constantly engaged with co-workers and customers handling mostly routine
tasks as opposed to the baggage service office which is much more secluded,
interrupted periodically by bursts of activity that require problem-solving skills to
resolve each customer’s unique situation.
An area that did exhibit important differences was in the availability of
management support to baggage service personnel. Southwest at Port
Columbus International is run by a station manager with a ten person span of
control. At least one member of that team is available on-site when an
employee is on-duty at the baggage service office except on Saturday nights
when two employees are assigned to the office instead. American Airlines at
Port Columbus International is run by a station manager with a three person
team, and personnel indicated that at smaller stations there may not always be a
supervisor available on-site. Finally, United Airlines has four customer service
managers on site but does not always have supervisors available in Columbus
when employees are on-duty at the baggage service office. The lack of
management support at all times for American and United present a situation
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ripe for the occurrence of critical incidents. Management is least likely to be
available late at night, when customers are most likely to be desperate to get
their situation resolved quickly. Also, many delayed bags arrive on the next
flight, which could mean forcing customers to wait until the next day for an
otherwise routine procedure.
Another important consideration for the effectiveness of service recovery
is the full package of employee compensation (Heskett, 1994). Pay, ancillary
benefits, and leadership provided by the companies as well as intangible perks
stated by front-line employees during interviews provide motivation for staff to
give high levels of service. Employees from all three companies mentioned
travel perks and flexibility of schedule as nice bonuses, while United Airlines
employees also mentioned the opportunity to create relationships with
customers and co-workers. Multiple Southwest employees expressed
satisfaction with pay relative to those at competitors. Although differences in
pay do not seem to be substantial, hourly American employees begin at $11 per
hour and can advance to $24 per hour whereas Southwest staff begin at $11.61
per hour and can expect to make $26.61 per hour after 12 years of employment,
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workers interact across organizations and have an awareness of relative
compensation which confers prestige to and fosters pride in those with higher
wages. Another key insight derives from the companies 2010 annual reports. At
first glance, Southwest appears to place a much greater emphasis on culture and
rewards for employees. Quantified as the number of times the reports mention
‘employees’ reveals the true extent of the difference between Southwest,
American, and United. Southwest references employees 100 times in 120 pages
for a rate of .83 per page. In comparison, American only writes about employees
40 times in 118 pages or .34 per page and United only 89 times in 224 pages or
.4 per page. These numbers suggest a fundamental difference in attitudes at
Southwest, American, and United with respect to focusing on employee
satisfaction and loyalty.
Closely tied to the compensation of employees is their training. With
proper guidance, employees can take their initiative and translate it into
competent action toward satisfying customers (Heskett, 1994). Southwest,
American, and United all appear to have similar training regimens. New hires are
sent to headquarters for two weeks of training on company procedures and
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systems. Staff at every company indicated that there is little emphasis on
customer service, although transmission of a strong employee-centric culture
during this initial training period could translate into high levels of service
(Hesket, 1994). Extrapolating from the annual report comparisons, Southwest
probably outperforms its competition in this regard. Remaining training is seen
by front-line staff as on-the-job training, although station managers indicated
that more was done. For example, Southwest and United managers stated that
shadowing occurred for up to two weeks after initial training while American’s
station manager explained that they have 3 day training available upon request
for current employees on new company systems. All three companies conduct
online courses on topics such as hazardous materials, disabled passengers, and
airport security. These programs are required for all staff on a yearly or other
time-sequenced basis. Training across the companies does not seem to differ
significantly.
Proper training coupled with a strong employee and customer culture
should translate into beneficial communication with complainants. One of the
first and most important things to do when fielding a complaint is to apologize
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for the problem (Bell & Zemke, 1987; Johnston & Michel, 2008). The only
employee who mentioned apologizing to customers was a Southwest front-line
staff member who made clear that she always consciously apologizes when
people come into the baggage service office. Another critical aspect of
communication during service recovery is making the customer feel as though
their issue is important to the company and will be fixed in a timely manner
(Johnston & Michel, 2008). Again, it appears that Southwest staff has a more
empathetic stance toward the customer. Every airlines’ employees stated that
they do not have typed policies or instructions available for customers to take
home at the baggage service office. American and United staff stated that they
usually refer people to their website if they need to see policies. In comparison,
a Southwest staff-member said, “We try not to refer customers to the website,
but to help them here”. This attitude, that a customer should be helped in
person and not from a website, provides significant contrast between Southwest
and competitors. It may make the customer feel more valued during their
dissatisfactory experience.
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Another aspect of ensuring that customers feel their complaint is valued
by the company is to resolve the issue quickly. Settling the problem within a
reasonable amount of time is one of the key drivers of customer satisfaction
with the recovery process (Boshoff, 1996). For airline passengers, many of
whom are in town only for a limited time, this time horizon may be shorter than
for other services. As mentioned earlier, late flights can force passengers to wait
until the next day to receive their delayed bags; pushing severe mishandling
issues, such as pilferage, damage, and lost and found, up the chain-of-command
or to headquarters can delay resolution by days or weeks. American, Southwest
and United appear to give similar amounts of autonomy to their front-line staff
in terms of identifying coverable complaints and awarding restitution. Likewise,
the companies exhibit parity in those issues that they send passengers to
headquarters for resolution about, such as getting reimbursed for expenses
during bag delays, which are handled on a case-by-case basis.
One counter-intuitive point arises in the inspection of the
appropriateness of restitution given by airlines to customers. Although it is easy
to surmise that a higher level of atonement would yield higher customer
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satisfaction and would be the route followed by Southwest to achieve such
dramatic results, this is not the case generally or in this case. In services
generally, it has been found that while higher levels of atonement do correlate
with more satisfied customers, it does not appear that atonement is necessary if
other aspects of service recovery are executed well (Boshoff, 1996). Not
surprisingly then, Southwest’s delivery schedules, bag repair contracts, bag
replacement policies, and liability limits are all the same or equivalently similar
to its competition.
Finally, customers’ attitudes are affected by the physical service recovery
environment (Spangenberg et al., 1996; Wakefield & Blodgett, 1996). Most
baggage services offices at any given airport are similar in layout, lighting, and
basic amenities since the offices are leased by the airlines from the airport.
However, strategic leasing can affect customer perceptions. For example,
Southwest and United’s baggage offices were easy to find and adjacent to their
assigned carousels, while American’s office was wedged between United’s office
and a construction company office, making it invisible from its assigned
carousels. Also, the Southwest office was the only one at Port Columbus
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International with branding beyond a name and logo combination on the back
wall. Their light-hearted poster on the wall behind the desk espoused the
company’s ethos of hard work while driving humor into a potentially tenuous
environment. Otherwise, all three companies posted liability signs with items
that they do not cover, and had similar decorations and branding on the
entrance, desk, and walls.
Not only does the office environment affect customer perception, but by
designing the office to facilitate work and make it more enjoyable for employees,
a company can raise employees’ performance. Each office at Port Columbus
International had equivalent layouts, seating, back-office space, and computer
terminals. The most prominent difference is that Southwest has a digital arrival
board in their baggage service office, which simplifies employees’
communication with customers about when the next arrival from a customer’s
point-of-origin is expected, to predict when their bag should arrive. However,
American and United track all bags in their system whereas Southwest does not,
which would allow their associates to give guaranteed assurance that a
customer’s bag will arrive on the next flight or pin-point its position in the
28
transportation system. Timely access to critical information is a clear potential
advantage for employees at American and United.
5. Conclusion
By benchmarking American and United’s service recovery against
Southwest’s, several things become clear about factors affecting successful
recovery. The ‘soft’ interpersonal skills espoused by Heskett et al. (1994)
generated by creating an employee-empowering company culture are
paramount to resolving service failures. It allows staff to respond quickly and
empathetically to customer needs, while also encouraging employees who want
to work in an environment where they must think critically to solve idiosyncratic
situations. Paradoxically, the level of atonement nor the title of respondent
serve as differentiators in the airline service recovery context.
Even though there are not significant differences between Southwest and
its competitors in any of the traditional service recovery paradigms of level of
atonement, title of respondent nor timeliness of recovery, their ability to
motivate employees seems to serve as an even more viable long-term
competitive advantage in service recovery. As mentioned, levels of atonement,
29
time to repayment and title of respondent can be replicated by competitors to
parity, but the small day-to-day actions of motivated employees cannot be easily
copied. Thus, Southwest’s ability to keep customers relatively satisfied with
baggage service recovery efforts stems not from the processes themselves but
from how employees utilize those avenues to shape customer experience.
This research has some limitations. First, it draws from a limited sample
base. More interviews across the management structure of all three airlines as
well as inspections of other baggage service offices could provide greater insight
into variations within each airline to inform a more holistic perspective on the
differences across airlines. We were also unable to do analysis of the over-the-
phone aspect of the bag recovery process of an actual mishandled bag, which
could provide further insights into the differences between Southwest and its
competitors. Finally, the study lacks actual input from customers.
These limitations presage some potential research projects. Extending
this study to include a larger population of airlines and members of those
organizations should serve to reinforce the conclusions above. Also, empirical
validation of the observations can solidify the conclusion that the service-profit
30
chain has a significant impact on service recovery efforts in airlines. Finally,
because the customer satisfaction data is probably generated from highly
dissatisfied customers, those upset enough to self-report on the Department of
Transportation website, a more focused study of differences between recovery
efforts of airlines during severe service failures may yield interesting insight.
31
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